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Thursday, 1 February 2024

January Review

Waxwings by Jane Tomlinson..

Highlights

January was a month of deluges, first in the typical sense with huge amounts of rain leading to widespread flooding throughout the county and causing localised chaos. The second deluge was a much more welcome one when the dam finally burst on the Waxwing invasion, with Oxon seeing dozens of birds up and down the county. We were made to wait a little while though, with the game of whack-a-mole continuing on from December and the first records of 2024 popping up in several places only to disappear again into the gardens, industrial estates and supermarkets of Oxfordshire. The first record was belated news of two birds in the grounds of a School in Chilton on the 2nd, Ardington then had a bird at dusk on the 5th whilst the following day a flock of 11 were in Kennington and a single at Thame. None of these birds were seen following their initial sightings despite some thorough searching, particularly at Kennington. The first semi-twitchable birds finally broke cover on the 7th with three birds in Bodicote in the far north of the county, allowing only a few folk to arrive on the scene in time. Thame also hosted birds on the 7th with 5 reported on the birding services. Again, following the now well-established pattern neither of these birds were present the following day.

The Wantage/Grove Waxwing courtesy of Stephen Burch

 
One of the Plater Drive Waxwings courtesy of Ben Sheldon

The mini onslaught of records kept coming with a single bird on the A420 slip road by Cumnor on the 8th with possibly more than one present in a brief observation. Things really kicked up a gear though on the 9th when news broke of a huge flock of up to 70 birds present in Didcot ranging widely between the Ladygrove Estate and the Tesco on the outskirts of town. With the birds seemingly present for several days, the counties bad luck continued with not a single bird still present on the 10th. That being said, a flock of 13 did pop up again on the 13th.  A pair of birds in the dying light in Oxford on the 9th looked set to follow all overs and disappear. Finally, though, some proper luck was in the offing and this pair were still present the following day. Although they then bunked for a week this pair grew to seven on the 17th with at least one bird hanging around until the 21st, allowing plenty of folk to catch up with them and some stunning photos to appear. The residents of Plater Drive have to take a huge amount of credit for being so accommodating to the photographers and birders that temporarily took residence on the cul-de-sac. Some very thoughtful people even created a small coffee and tea stand for the guys who had spent the day camped out on street! 


The Plater Drive Waxwings, courtesy of Gnome

 

 

Tea & Coffee kindly provided by the residents
Photo courtesy of Andy Last.

Happy Birders in Jericho courtesy of Jane Tomlinson.

The 10th saw another report of a mega flock when 50 were reportedly at Thame, presumably part of the same flock that had been in Didcot the previous day. Reports then followed same pattern of birds reported or seen only very briefly. Grove and Kidlington saw single birds on the 13th and 17th respectively, whilst the 20th saw many more records across a wider range. Cholsey and Standlake both had flocks of five in birders gardens on the 20th, surely the dream! Freeland also had a flock of 16 reported on the 20th but all these records were brief as we had become accustomed to. Abingdon also got in on the action with one briefly in another birders garden on the 21st and present again the following day, whilst a pair was then present on the 24th again only briefly. 

Watching the 'wings in Long Hanborough
courtesy of Moth.


The next twitchable birds fell on the 25th when a fantastic flock of 21 was located in Long Hanborough. This allowed almost everyone else to connect with this enigmatic and characterful species in the county with a mini-twitch ensuing. The most unusual Waxwing report came from RAF Brize Norton, where a single bird was apparently perched on the wing of an A400 on the 19th, in what would have made for a fantastic photo! A flock of 18 were then also apparently present here on the 25th.

All in all it really has been a fantastic January, with Oxon finally getting its fair share of the largest Waxwing irruption in many years. With the last major irruption reaching Oxfordshire more than a decade ago in 2013, long before some of us even arrived in the county, let’s hope the action continues for the next couple of months as it did back then.

Waders

The surprise record of the month came in the form of a pair of Knot on the Farmoor causeway. A very early record for this species with median arrival date being the 27th March and certainly is a fantastic winter record for this not always annual species. The pair present on the 8th was not quite the earliest record since the turn of the century though, with a record beating it by a single day coming on the 7th January in 2006. The pair were present until the 16th when only a single bird remained from the 17th until at least the 24th. Even more surprising was the possibility of a 2nd pair on a flood near Thame in Cuttlebrook on the 14th. Frustratingly the pair remained distance hidden in amongst the large Lapwing flock. 

One of the two Farmoor Knot, courtesy of Steve Liptrot
 

Grey Plover continued their winter residence in the county although records probably only related to a single individual ranging across two sites. A lone bird was finally pinned down on Port Meadow on the 14th after a few near misses earlier in the month and was again present on the 20th. Presumably the same bird was then picked up at Otmoor during the WEBS count here on the 29th amongst the thousands of Golden Plover, Lapwing and various wildfowl wintering on the site. Ruff were at two sites also this month with a single bird at Chimney Meadows on the 21st and then five on Otmoor during the WEBS count on the 29th. Dunlin, however, were very numerous and widespread this month a possible consequence of the mega flocks dispersing from the end of 2023 into more parts of Oxon as the water levels rose. Port Meadow had by the far the largest number of records and individuals this month with a high count of 50 on the 14th, although 30+ was reached on several occasions whilst birds were semi-resident on site throughout the month. Otmoor also saw several double digit counts with the highest count of 22 on the 15th, whilst Farmoor had 25 fly through the site on the 17th. Somerton, Pit 60 and Chimney Meadows all hosted birds in January with double digit counts reached on the latter two sites, with a high of 29 on Chimney Meadows on the 21st

Farmoor Dunlin, courtesy of Gareth Cashburn

 

Water Rail on a frozen Otmoor courtesy of Sue Carruthers.

The first big sign of spring on its way, aside from the lighter mornings and evenings, came in the form of an early Oystercatcher on the 27th at Rushy Common followed by birds on the 30th at Pit 60 and Blenheim on the 31st. Although not quite the earliest record of the last near quarter of a century, that particular accolade goes to a bird arriving on the 12th January in 2021, it still a fortnight earlier than the median arrival date since the turn of the century. That being said, birds have been arriving earlier and earlier in recent years with a particular change of arrivals noted in 2017 and it’s a pattern I suspect will continue with milder winters the new ‘normal’. Redshank were only noted at one site this month – Port Meadow. A single was near resident on the common for most of the month and joined by a 2nd bird briefly on the 9th.

Green Sandpiper seemed to have wintered at few sites in the early part of the winter period, but several sites hosted birds in the New Year.  Four sites hosted birds in January with a high count of three at Bicester Wetland’s on the 2nd. Additional sites were Ardley (1st), Grove Airfield (13th) and Peep-o-Day Lane (26th). Common Sandpiper was present at one site this month, with Farmoor hosting the same wintering bird that was present the previous month and was again present for the whole of January. I am aware of Green Sandpiper showing incredible site fidelity for wintering sites but not certain of Common Sandpiper but given one has wintered at Farmoor for the last couple of years you have to wonder if it’s the same bird.

Farmoor Common Sandpiper courtesy of John Workman

Two Jack Snipe records came this month with the most interesting one from Port Meadow on the 12th. This bird was caught as part of a ringing effort on the site and was facilitated by the recent rising waters and a thermal imager, resulting in the cracking photo below. A 2nd bird was seen in flight at Otmoor on the 31st when flushed by quartering Marsh Harrier.

A ringed Jack Snipe, courtesy of Gnome

Woodcock came from three sites and all were typically located through flushing or seen in flight. Boarstall Decoy provided the bulk of the sightings though and even topped the previous months high count with a massive count of 21 in total, although I am not certain of the record count for this species in the county this must be up there as one of the highest for a single site. Warburg and Garford were the other two sites to record birds, albeit a much more typical single bird in flight. 

Although often overlooked in the monthly reviews, Golden Plover and Lapwing were present in huge numbers on Otmoor over the winter period. The high counts this month of 4000 and 5000 respectively make for an amazing spectacle, especially when you add in the thousands of Wildfowl, hunting raptors of several species and 50+ thousand Starling we are indeed very lucky to have such a reserve within our counties borders. Waterstock though also hosted a huge number of Lapwing this month with approximately 4000 here also, a great count for a lesser known site and that is clearly also doing something right for our wintering birds.

Wildfowl etc

A mixture of long staying birds and the odd new one was the story of wintering wildfowl this month. The Great Northern Diver continued its winter holiday at Farmoor and was present all the way until the end of January. Having been present now since the 11th December it still has some way to go to beat the record staying bird of 2021/22 which stayed for a whopping 155 days between the 12th December and 16th May. 

The Farmoor Great Northern Diver courtesy of Nick Truby

The wintering female Scaup also continued on site for much of January although it seems it had decided to bunk on the 26th of the month and was possibly the same bird briefly on Rushy Common of all places on the 27th. A male Scaup was a nice addition then, also in the less than typical spot of Blenheim on the 22nd and a nice bonus patch tick for one local birder. Unfortunately the bird had gone the following day and along with the female was not seen again in the latter part of January. 

 

The Farmoor female Greater Scaup courtesy of Nick Truby...

...and the male at Blenheim courtesy of Gareth Cashburn
 

A lone female Common Scoter was the standout rarity of the month, although unfortunately after spending much of the day loafing with the Tufted Duck flock on the 6th it had departed the site by the next day. Another highlight of the month was the arrival of four White-fronted Geese on Otmoor on the 26th of the month. The three juveniles and single adult were still present towards the end of the month or at least until the 29th, a nice addition to the month with this near annual species and not always an easy bird to catch up with in the county.

White-fronted Geese Otmoor rspb courtesy of Paul Wyeth.

Six sites hosted Shelduck this month with a maximum count of eight coming from two sites – Chimney Meadows and Port Meadow on the 16th and the 22nd respectively. Cote, Peep-o-Day Lane and North Moreton all hosted multiple birds throughout the month whilst Farmoor had a pair of birds fly through on the 27th. Goosander were also widespread with nine sites recording birds. The high count came from Port Meadow where up to nine birds were present on the 7th, although Radley Lakes came close with eight birds on the 14th. Other sites recording birds were Peep-o-Day Lane, Blenheim, Pit 27 & Pit 60, Farmoor, Kennington and Henley Road GP’s. Goldeneye continues to dwindle in number within the county with only five sites recording birds with only one double digit count anywhere in Oxon. Dix Pit, the most reliable site now, hosted 12 birds on the 13th. Other sites that recorded birds were all close in the vicinity of Dix Pit with Pit 27 & Pit 60, Farmoor and Rushy Common all had at least one bird present in January.

An extraordinary count of Pintail came from Pit 60 this month when 912 were counted on the 20th. This count smashes the previous county record coming from the same location with 600 here in 2014. The BTO estimates 20,000 individuals winter in the UK (2012-2017) and this count equates to approximately 4.5% of the wintering population, a crazy record for single site in Oxfordshire and a nationally important number of birds. 

Mixed wildfowl courtesy of Pete Alfrey

 

 

Herons, egrets etc

Cattle Egret pretty much continued where they left off from the previous month. Peep-o-Day Lane continued to host a trio of birds, which increased to 6 on the 12th and was back down to a pair by the end of the month. Farmoor Village had the highest count again with a whopping 31 feeding in the livestock pasture on New Years Day, the flock continued to ebb and flow in number through the month with 20 just down the road at Swinford on the 6th. Blenheim hosted a single bird on the 10th, whilst Otmoor and Days Lock hosted several birds sporadically in January.

Great White Egret were very widespread in the county this month with 16 sites hosting at least one bird with multiple sites hosting several birds. The high count came from Blenheim as with previous months where four birds were seen on the 16th, although four were also seen at Tadpole Bridge on the 12th. The Salisbury Plain Great Bustard continued to strangely follow the Roe Deer herd around Childrey Field on the Oxon Downs and was reported sporadically in the month. An unconfirmed report of two White Stork over the A40 at Forest Hill came on the 12th with no further reports anywhere else the county this month.

Gulls and Terns

A long staying Little Gull over the border in Gloucestershire was seemingly crossing the tri-county border of Glos/Wilts/Oxon fairly frequently as it ranged with the Black-headed Gull flock in the early part of the month and was a nice early addition to the county list for this species. A lone Mediterranean Gull record came from Farmoor on the 29th during a count of the gull roost joining the rest of nearly 12500 gulls roosting there that were counted on the 19th as part of the BTO Gull count.

Caspian Gull were recorded from four sites this month, with the site having the most action being Appleford Village. At least 10 individuals have been seen here over the course of the month including two ringed birds – one from the Netherlands and the other from Lithuania. Port Meadow regularly had a 1st winter bird roosting during the month whilst a 3rd winter joined the roost on the 9th. Blenheim had an adult bird present on the 11th and the 26th and appeared to be a regularly returning bird that has been here for the last few years. Rushy Common was the other site and hosted a single 1st winter on the 27th

The semi-resident first winter Caspian Gull at Port Meadow courtesy of Ewan Urquhart


Passerines

The wintering ringed Siberian Chiffchaff continued at Port Meadow and was regularly reported from Burgess Gate whilst occasionally a 2nd bird was also reported in January, reports of another bird came from Shifford on the 28th. A single record of Firecrest came from Peep-o-Day Lane on New Years Day, whilst Crossbill were reported from two sites – Buckland Warren and Bagley Wood on the 6th and 9th respectively.

Siberian Chiffchaff Burgess Field courtesy of Thomas Miller.

Brambling were recorded from at least eight sites this month. By far the highest count came from Blenheim where 35+ birds were counted feeding in the sunflower fields on the site. Most of the other records related to single and pairs with no other double digit counts from any other site. Ring-necked Parakeet continued to gather in a large roost in Cowley, Oxford with 30 on the 22nd and then a huge 42 on the 29th.

Rob Cadd took a great bit of video of the dancing Starlings at Otmoor last month.

Raptors

The two wintering ringtail Hen Harrier continued on the Oxon Downs and Otmoor this month with both seen sporadically, although the Otmoor bird was much more reliable owing to the Starling Roost and presumably much increased coverage. The site also hosted a Merlin on the 13th and 27th and was one of only two record this month with the other coming from Fyfield Wick on the 18th.

Ringtail Hen Harrier Otmoor rspb courtesy of Andy Coates.

In what has been a fantastic year for Short-eared Owl across the country, Oxon was not omitted from the action. At least eight sites hosted birds and ranged from all parts of the county. Some sites hosted up to seven birds with multiple birds recorded across at least two locations. It just makes you wonder how many birds are actually wintering in the county in this irruption year for the species.


                         Short-eared Owl and Long-eared Owl ringed recently in the county (courtesy of WORG)


Patchwork challenge

Patch

Birder

Points

Species

Highlight

Aston eyot

Ben Sheldon

51

51

 

Ardley ERF

Gareth Casburn

59

57

 

Dix pit

Simon Bradfield

43

40

 

Grimsbury reservoir

Gareth Blockley

70

73

 

Lye valley

Tom Bedford

51

50

 

River Thames

Geoff Wyatt

104

91

 

Sutton courtenay

Conor MacKenzie

85

80

Firecrest & Cattle Egret

Port Meadow

Thomas Miller

 

 

 

Radley GP’s

Ian Elkins

75

72

Great White Egret & Goosander

Freeland

Glen Pascoe

34

32

 

South Hinksey

Alex Figueiredo

42

41

 

Cholsey

Alan Dawson

81

78

 



Short-eared Owl courtesy of John Reynolds.




Where do the birds go?


Piece together a map of bird migration.

Artist Jane Tomlinson is currently taking pre-orders for jigsaw puzzles of her hand-painted 
map of bird migration. Her painting was featured on BBC's Autumnwatch in 2021. 
Jane's painting depicts 42 of the many species that migrate to & from the British Isles 
- and obviously includes this month's star bird - the waxwing. 

The jigsaw is exceptionally high quality, 1000 pieces, made in the UK, and comes with no 
plastic packaging. If you'd like one, pre-order before 5 February, and it will come to you in 
early March. 
















3 comments:

  1. A very enjoyable read thank you.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I don't usually report but Monday 27th, disturbed a Merlin in Peep Oday Lane that flew down Stonehill Lane and reappeared by GP.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Excellent round-up as usual, Conor. Thanks.

    ReplyDelete